FTC Set to Appeal the Red Flags Rule Exemption for Attorneys and Law Firms

On February 25, 2010, the Federal Trade Commission filed a notice that it is appealing the D.C. District Court’s December 28, 2009 judgment in favor of the American Bar Association in American Bar Association v. FTC.  The District Court’s summary judgment held that the FTC’s Identity Theft Red Flags Rule (“Red Flags Rule” or the “Rule”) does not apply to attorneys or law firms.  The Rule implements Sections 114 and 315 of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act.  In relevant part, the Rule requires creditors and financial institutions that offer or maintain certain accounts to implement an identity theft prevention program.  The program must be designed to detect, prevent and mitigate the risk of identity theft.  Prior to the district court’s decision, the FTC had taken the position in publications and numerous panels that attorneys and law firms meet the Rule’s definition of “creditor” because they allow clients to pay for legal services after the services are rendered.

To read more about the Red Flags Rule, please see our previous blog posts

View the FTC’s notice of appeal.

FTC Extends Enforcement Deadline for Red Flags Rule (Again)

The FTC today announced that it would, for the fourth time, delay enforcement of the Identity Theft Red Flags Rule.  The enforcement date is now June 1, 2010 for creditors and financial institutions subject to FTC jurisdiction.  The agency stated that the delay was requested by members of Congress, who are currently considering a bill that would limit the rule's scope.  That bill (which would exclude certain entities with 20 or fewer employees from the rule's definition of "creditor" and also would provide a mechanism for other entities to apply for that exclusion) recently passed the House by a margin of 400 to 0 and was referred to the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs.  Please refer to our recent post regarding other developments that limit the rule's application.

Court Finds That Lawyers Are Not Subject to the FTC's Identity Theft Red Flags Rule

It is being reported that the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia agreed this morning with the American Bar Association's argument that the FTC's Identity Theft Red Flags Rule ("Red Flags Rule" or the "Rule") does not apply to lawyers.  The Rule implements Section 114 and 315 of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (the "FACT Act").  In relevant part, the Rule requires creditors and financial institutions that offer or maintain certain accounts to implement an identity theft prevention program.  The program must be designed to detect, prevent, and mitigate the risk of identity theft. The FTC has interpreted the definition of "creditor" broadly.  The Commission has taken the position in publications and numerous panels that lawyers and law firms meet the definition of creditor because they allow clients to pay for legal services after the services are rendered.  For law firms (as well as for other entities that the FTC deems subject to its enforcement jurisdiction), November 1, 2009 is the deadline for compliance with the provisions of the Rule that require implementation of an identity theft prevention program.

In reaching the decision, Judge Reggie Walton is reported to have stated that he was reluctant to conclude that Congress intended to regulate lawyers when it enacted the FACT Act, which the Red Flags Rule implements.  The court also questioned the FTC's broad interpretation of the term "creditor." Judge Walton is reported to have questioned whether the term could be interpreted so broadly as to render a plumber who bills a customer after performing his work a "creditor" within the meaning of the Rule.  Notably, the Judge's comment may leave the door open for other challenges to the Rule by myriad small businesses whom the FTC considers "creditors" subject to the Rule.

It is reported that the court granted an injunction against the enforcement of the Rule and a declaratory judgment finding that lawyers are not subject to the Rule.  The FTC is expected to appeal the decision.

As Red Flags Deadline Looms, Attempts to Limit Scope Advance

The November 1st deadline for compliance with the FTC’s Red Flags Rule Identity Theft Prevention Program requirements is rapidly approaching.  Of late, there has been a flurry of activity aimed at limiting the scope of the rule.  The Red Flags Rule, which was jointly promulgated by several federal agencies in November 2007, requires all “creditors” that offer or maintain a “covered account” to implement a written identity theft prevention program.  A “creditor” is defined broadly to include “any person who regularly extends, renews, or continues credit.”  In March 2009, the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) published a how-to guide for businesses to comply with the Red Flags Rule that confirmed the FTC will broadly construe the rule, stating that the definition of a “creditor” includes all businesses that “provide goods or services and bill customers later.”

Although numerous organizations such as the American Medical Association have expressed their objections to the scope of the rule, the American Bar Association (“ABA”) escalated matters in August 2009 by requesting a federal court to issue an injunction that bars the FTC from enforcing the Red Flags Rule with respect to attorneys.  The ABA argues in its complaint that there is no “legally supportable basis for application of the red flags rule to lawyers engaged in the practice of law.”  On September 23, 2009, the ABA filed a motion for summary judgment in the case, and the FTC responded by filing a memorandum in opposition that argues that “subjecting attorneys to the Red Flags Rule is based on the attorney’s billing arrangement with clients—essentially an accounting function—and not on some essential element of the lawyer-client relationship, such as the protection of client confidences.”  The District Court of the District of Columbia has scheduled a hearing on the ABA’s motion on October 29, 2009, just three days before the Red Flags Rule is set to take effect.

On October 20, 2009, the House of Representatives approved H.R. 3763, which amends the Fair Credit Reporting Act to exclude health care, accounting and legal practices with 20 or fewer employees from being deemed “creditors” subject to the Red Flags Rule.  In addition to the specific exemptions for small health care providers, accounting firms, and law firms, H.R. 3763 also allows the FTC to exclude any other business from the definition of “creditor” if the business applies for an exclusion and either (1) knows all of its customers or clients individually; (2) only performs services in or around the residences of its customers; or (3) has not experienced incidents of identity theft and identity theft is rare for businesses of that type.  Finally, the bill requires the FTC to issue regulations within 180 days of the enactment of the bill that set forth the process by which businesses may apply for these exclusions.  Despite the House’s passage of the bill, there has been no similar legislation introduced in the Senate and it is unclear whether there are any plans to do so before the November 1st deadline.

FTC Publishes Identity Theft Program Template for Low-Risk Entities

On May 13, 2009, the Federal Trade Commission ("FTC") published a compliance template designed to assist financial institutions and creditors "at low risk for identity theft " in developing the Identity Theft Prevention Program required by the FTC’s Identity Theft Red Flags and Address Discrepancies Rule (the "Rule").  The template is entitled "A Do-It-Yourself Prevention Program for Businesses and Organizations at Low Risk for Identity Theft."

While the Rule does not explicitly contemplate a category of entities that are "at low risk for identity theft," the imposition of less onerous requirements on lower-risk entities is consistent with the Rule'’s risk-based approach to combating identity theft.  To take advantage of the template, an entity first must assess whether it is at low risk for identity theft.  The FTC suggests that low risk may be shown by factors such as knowing customers personally, providing services at customers'’ homes, not having experienced fraud based on identity theft in the past and being in a line of business in which it is uncommon to experience fraud due to identity theft.  These factors are not exhaustive, however, as the template requires entities to also consider their unique circumstances in determining their identity theft risk level.  The assessment and the resulting conclusion must be documented in the template. 

The FTC template then guides low-risk entities through the requirements of the Rule by asking them to identify red flags they may experience in their business if a consumer tries to obtain a product or service via identity theft.  The template assists low-risk entities in selecting methods to detect and respond to red flags and administering their Identity Theft Prevention Programs, including implementing updates and managing service providers.  Unlike the Rule, the template requires low-risk entities to document only the final, streamlined Identity Theft Prevention Program (which may be done by simply printing the completed template) and, as compared to the Rule, appears to place less emphasis on the process by which the program is developed.  The template'’s program administration requirements are also less onerous than those contemplated by the Rule.

Notably, the template does not address the issue of whether an entity is subject to the Rule; rather, it assists only in implementation of an Identify Theft Prevention Program once the entity has determined that it is subject to the Rule and is a low-risk entity. In other words, the template does not assist entities in the determination of whether they are financial institutions or creditors, nor does it assist entities in determining whether they have "covered accounts" that necessitate implementation of an Identity Theft Prevention Program, although these issues have been the subject of much debate and confusion among business interests.  In order to make these determinations, businesses may look to the Rule and the FTC’s Red Flags Guide for guidance.

The FTC Identity Theft Prevention Program compliance template for entities that are at low risk for identity theft is available here.